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It was first given by Edgeworth, but he uses it to show the possibility of exchange between two persons and not to explain consumer’s demand. Two English.

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Presentation on theme: "It was first given by Edgeworth, but he uses it to show the possibility of exchange between two persons and not to explain consumer’s demand. Two English."— Presentation transcript:

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2 It was first given by Edgeworth, but he uses it to show the possibility of exchange between two persons and not to explain consumer’s demand. Two English economist, J.R. Hicks and R.G.D. Allen in their paper ‘A Reconsideration of the Theory of Value’, criticised Marshall’s cardinal utility analysis and put forward the indifference curve approach based on ordinal utility to explain consumer behavior. In 1939,Hicks reproduced the indifference curve theory in his book ‘Value and capital’.

3 According to the supporters of the indifference curve theory, utility is a psychic entity and it cannot therefore be measured in quantitative cardinal terms. Utility is psychological feeling is not quantifiable. Ordinal utility implies that the consumer is capable of simply ‘comparing the different levels of satisfaction’. According to the ordinal utility hypothesis, while the consumer may not be able to indicate the exact amount of utility that he derives from commodities or any combination of them, but he is capable of judging whether the satisfaction obtained from a good or a combination of goods is equal to, lower than, or higher than another.

4 Indifference curve shows different combinations of two goods that gives equal satisfaction to the consumer and consumer is indifferent in the choice of matter between them. Definition Koutsoyiannis, “An indifference curve is the locus of point particular combination of goods, which yield the same utility to the consumer, so that he is indifferent as to the particular combination he consumes.”

5  Rational Consumer  Ordinal Utility  Diminishing Marginal Rate of Substitution  Two Goods Model  Continuity  Scale of Preference  Transitivity  Consistency in Selection  Non Satiety  Weak Ordering

6 Combina tion X GoodY GoodMRSxy A 115---- B 2111:4 C 381:3 D 461:2 E 551:1 Y X O A1 A2 A3 A4 X commodity B1 B2 B3 B4 Y commodity IC C C2 C3 C4 L M N

7 It consist of set of indifference curves. A diagram showing a number of indifferent curves corresponding to different indifference schedules is an indifference map. A lower IC shows lower level of satisfaction. Y Y Commodity X O X Commodity IC 1 IC 2 IC 3

8 The rate at which the consumer is prepared to exchange goods X and Y is known as marginal rate of substitution. Or We may define the marginal rate of substitution of X for Y as the amount of Y whose loss can just compensate the consumer for one unit gain in X.

9 MRS of X for Y diminishes as more and more of good X is substituted for good Y. In other words, as the consumer has more and more of good X, he is prepared to forgo less and less of good Y. MRSxy=(-) ----- ▲Y ▲X

10 There are two reasons:  First, the want for a particular good is satiable  Second, the goods are imperfect substitutes

11 Property 1. Indifference Curve slopes downward to the right IC Can’t be Y X IC Y commodity O X commodity Y X Y X Y X OOO

12 Property 2: IC are convex to the origin Can’t be IC O a a1 a2 a3 X X Commodity Y b b1 b2 b3 Y Commodity

13 Property 3. IC can’t Intersect and touch each other Property 4. A higher IC show higher level of Satisfaction A B C O M N X X Commodity YSRQYSRQ Y commodity O a1 X X commodity Y B1 B2 E E1 A B C Y good

14 Property 5: IC need not be parallel to each other Property6: IC do not touch either X- axis or Y axis Y Y good O X Good X Y O X good X Y good IC3 IC2

15 IC in case of Substitute IC in case of complimentary goods X good Y good X good Y good IC1 IC2 IC1

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